This week's Pastor's Page will be a smorgesborg of items bearing on
different issues. First
off. media coverage of the Pro-Life rally at our State Capitol on the
anniversary of Roe v. Wade. As I stood waiting for the scheduled
program to begin, an elderly gentleman asked me if I thought the rally
would get much coverage from the media. I pointed to a couple of men
with very large, expensive-looking cameras who were hovering near the
speakers' podium and I suggested that they were probably from the local
press. I even ventured a guess that on the basis of the paper's past
practice, they might be from the Star
Tribune. Sure enough: the following morning the Star Tribune devoted three quarters
of a page to a sympathetic report on the rally with two illustrative
photos, one of them spread clear across the page. And the coverage in
the Pioneer Press? Zilch,
nada, nichts. Not a line, not a word that I could find. And no surprise
there. Though the editorial policy of each of the two papers is in my
judgment slanted towards the left, it's been my perception over many a
year that the Star Tribune's
coverage of events related to local pro-Life and/or Catholic issues has
by and large been friendlier than that of its rival east of the river.

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And speaking of the Star Tribune,
one of the paper's regular columnists, Katherine Kersten, a devout and
extremely intelligent Roman Catholic, is known for expressing non-p. c.
opinions that infuriate the left. A recent example is her colunm on
Sunday, January 17th. I reprint it here, just slightly abridged.

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That's a
Funny Way to Show Tolerance!
By Katherine Kersten
Star Tribune, January 17, 2010

African-Americans
targeted for harassment. Swastikas scrawled on churches and religious
books burned. Homes defaced and people hounded from their jobs because
of their political beliefs.

Has the Ku
Klux Klan returned? Are neo-Nazis or fundamentalist right-wing hate
groups on the rise?

Guess again.
This is the work of a sizable number of activists who have decided that
any bullying, brown-shirt tactic is fair game in their battle to impose
gay marriage on America.

One skirmish
in that battle played out last week In Perry vs. Schwarzenegger, four gay plaintiffs
have sued to OVERTURN PROPOSITION 8-the 2008 amendment that California
voters added to their state's constitution to ensure that marriage
REMAINS the union of one man and one woman. Plaintiffs claim the
amendment violates the U. S. Constitution and seek judicially imposed
same-sex marriage in all 50 states.

On Wednesday, the U. S. Supreme Court rejected federal District Judge
Vaughn Walker's decision to broadcast proceedings on YouTube. Defendants argued that
such a broadcast would increase witnesses' vulnerability to
intimidation and harassment.

What do they
fear?

Take, for
instance, the bullying tactics on display DURING the campaign for
Pproposition 8. Supporters who put signs in their yards risked a
brick through their living-room windows, spray paint on their garages
and vandalized cars. One woman reported finding her staircase
covered in urine. In another case, two women parked an SUV in front of
a Proposition 8 supporter's home, with an arrow and the words "Bigots
live here" scrawled on the window.

Blacks were
singled out for persecution, since they FAVORED PROPOSITION 8 in LARGE
numbers.Time magazine
cited eyewitness reports that racial epithets were used at
anti-Proposition 8 protests.

Activists
also targeted religious institutions, reserving special venom for
Mormons. After Proposition 8's passage, at least 17 Mormon
houses of worship were defaced, and a suspicious white powder
was mailed to two others. At one temple, the Book of Mormon was torched
on the doorstep.

Gay-marriage
activists made skillful use of public data to harass citizens who
DONATED to the "Yes on 8" campaign. One website,
"eightrnaps.com," displayed a map that enabled activists to pinpoint
the identity, employer, donation size and location of certain "Prop 8"
supporters. Another site, sponsored by a group called Californians
Against Hate, revealed some "Prop 8" donors' addresses and telephone
numbers. The San Francisco
Chronicle and Los Angeles
Times also posted
search engines that facilitated targeting of this kind.

Not surprisingly, many
"Prop 8" supporters were bombarded with harassing calls and e-mails.
Some lost their jobs, including Scott Eckern, artistic director
of the California Musical Theatre in Sacramento, and Richard Raddon,
president of the Los Angeles Fi.m Festival. Both resigned after their
private donations were publicized and activists threatened to boycott
their organizations. Dozens of businesses-
including hotels, insurance agencies, accounting firms and dentist
offices-were
similarly targeted because of their owners' or their employees' private
donations.

Even
ordinary folks had reason to fear. After Proposition 8 passed, gay
activists mobbed El Coyote, a restaurant in Los Angeles, calling
for a boycott because the owner's daughter, Margorie Christoffersen,
had donated $100 in support of the measure. Shouting "shame on you,
" they hurled vulgarities at diners. Though Christoffersen
apologized, "boisterous street protests erupted" after she refused to renounce her
stance. According to the Wall Street
Journal, Christoffersen took a leave of absence.

Maggie Gallagher, president of the National Organization for Marriage,
summed up the situation this way. "The same-sex marriage movement," she
wrote, has revealed itelf as "a political tsunami which will brook no dissent and openly seeks to punish
Americans who disagree
with its new dogmas."

Events in California reveal a troubling double standard
on the part of gay activists. While they demand
tolerance from others, many appear to view tolerance as a ONE- WAY
STREET ....[Emphasis added]

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And finally may I share with you a timely article (given a ftont-page
lead-in) from The New York Times
for January 20, 2010. The pace of the continuing revolution in
electronic communications is so amazingly swift that parents may not be
aware of the imperative need to set some LIMITS on their children's use
of the electronic gadgets that just a few years ago simply didn't
exist.

Children
Awake? Then They're Probably Online
By Tamar Lewin
From: The New York Times of Wednesday, January 20, 2010.

The average
young American now spends practically every
waking minute-except for the time in school-using a smart phone,
computer, television or other electronic device, according to a new
study from the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Those aged 8
to 18 spend more than seven and a half hours a day with such devices,
compared with less than six and a half hours five years ago, when the
study was last conducted. And that does NOT count
the hour and a half that youths spend texting, or the half-hour they
talk on their cellphones.

And because
so many of them are mullitasking-say, surfing the Internet while
listening to music--they pack on average nearly 11 hours of media
content into that seven and a half hours.

"I feel like my days would be boring without it," said Francisco
Sepulveda, a 15-year-old Bronx eighth grader who uses his smart phone
to surf the Web, watch videos, listen to music- AND send or receive
about 500 texts a day.

The study's findings shocked its authors, who had concluded in 2005
that use could not possibly grow further, and confirmed the fears of
many parents whose children are constantly tethered to
media devices. It
found, moreover, that heavy media use is associated with several
negatives, including behavior problems and lower-grades.

The third in
a series, the study found that young people's media consumption grew
far more in the last five years than it did from 1999 to 2004,
as sophisticated mobile
technology like ipods and smart phones brought media access into
teenagers' pockets and beds....

Contrary to popular wisdom, the heaviest media users reported spending
[much the same] amount of time exercising as did light media users.
Nonetheless, other studies have established a link between screen time
and obesity.

While most of the young people in the study got good grades, 47 percent of the
heaviest media users--those who consumed at least 16 hours a day-had
mostly C's or lower, compared with 23 percent of those who typically
consumed media three hours a day or less. The heaviest media users were
also more likely than the lightest users to report that they were bored
or sad, or that they got into trouble, did not get along well with
their parents and were not happy at school

The study could not say whether the media use causes problems, or
rather, whether troubled
young people turn to heavy
media use.

"This is a
stunner," said Donald F. Roberts, a Stanford communications
professor emeritus who is one of the authors of the study. "In the second report,
I remember writing a paragraph saying we've hit a ceiling on media use,
since there just aren't enough hours in the day to increase the time
children spend on media. But now it's up an hour."

The report
is based on a survey of more than 2,000 students in grades 3 through 12
that was conducted from October 2008 to May 2009.

On average, young people spend about two hours a day consuming media on
a mobile device, the study found. They spend almost another hour on "old" content
like television or music delivered through newer pathways like the Web
site Hulu or iTunes. Young people now spend
more time listening to or watching media on their cellphones, or
playing games, than talking on them.

"I use it as my alarm clock, because it has an annoying ringtone that
doesn't stop until you turn it off," Francisco Sepulveda said of his
smart phone. "At night, I can text or watch something on YouTube until
I fall asleep. It lets me talk on the phone and watch a video at the
same time, or listen to music while I send text messages."

His mother, Janet Sepulveda, bought the Sidekick LX a year ago when the
family computer was not working, to ensure that her son had intemet
access he might need for school. But schoolwork has not been the issue.

"I'd say he uses it about 2 percent for homework and 98 percent for
other stuff," she said. "At the beginning, I would take the phone at 10
p.m. and tell him he couldn't use it anymore. Now he knows that if he's
not complying with what I want, I can suspend his service for a week or
two. That's happened."

The Kaiser
study found that more than 7 in 10 young people have a television in
their bedroom and about a third have a computer with Internet access in
their bedroom. [A BIG MISTAKE!]

"Parents never
knew as much as they thought they did about what their kids are doing."
Mr. Roberts said, "but
now we've created a world where they're removed from us that much more,
and parents don't
have a clue what kids are listening to, watching, talking about."

The study
found that young people used LESS media IN HOMES WITH RULES like no
television during meals and no television in the bedroom, or with
limits on media time.

Victoria Rideout, a Kaiser vice president who is lead author of the
study, said that although
it had become harder for parents to control what their children do,
they can still have an effect.

I don't think parents should feel totally disempowered," she said. "They can still make
the rules, and it still makes a difference."

In Kensington, Maryland, Kim Calinan let her baby son, Trey, watch Baby
Einstein videos while she showered and made dinner, and soon moved him
on to "Dora the Explorer."

"By the time he was 4, he had all these math and science DVDS, and he
was clicking through by himself, and he learned to read and do math
early," she said, "So if we'd had the conversation then, I would have
said they were great educational tools."

But now that
Trey is 9 and wild about video games, Ms. Calinan feels differently.

Last year
she sensed that video games were displacing other interests and
narrowing his social interactions. After realizing that Trey
did not want to sign up for any after-school activities that might cut
into his game time, Ms. Calinan limited his screen time to an hour and
half a day on weekends only.

So last
Wednesday, Trey came home and read a book, "Secret Hiding
Places"-but said he was looking forward to the weekend when he could
play his favorite video game Pokemon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of the
Sky."

Many experts believe that media use is changing youthful attitudes.

It's changed young people's assumptions about how to get an answer to a
question," Mr. Roberts said. "People can put out a
problem, whether it's 'Where's a good bar?' or 'What if I'm
pregnant?' and
information pours in from ALL KINDS of sources." [That's for
sure!]

The heaviest
media users, the study found, are black and Hispanic youths and
"tweens," or those ages 11 to 14.

Even during the survey, media use was changing.

"One of the hot topics today is Twitter, but when we first went into
the field and began interviewing Twitter didn't exist," Ms. Rideout
said.